RTCStatsReport
The RTCStatsReport
interface of the WebRTC API provides a statistics report for a RTCPeerConnection
, RTCRtpSender
, or RTCRtpReceiver
.
An RTCStatsReport
instance is a read-only Map
-like object, in which each key is an identifier for an object for which statistics are being reported, and the corresponding value is a dictionary object providing the statistics.
Instance properties
RTCStatsReport.size
-
Returns the number of items in the
RTCStatsReport
object.
Instance methods
RTCStatsReport.entries()
-
Returns a new Iterator object that contains a two-member array of
[id, statistic-dictionary]
for each element in theRTCStatsReport
object, in insertion order. RTCStatsReport.forEach()
-
Calls
callbackFn
once for each key-value pair present in theRTCStatsReport
object, in insertion order. If athisArg
parameter is provided toforEach
, it will be used as thethis
value for each callback. RTCStatsReport.get()
-
Returns the statistics dictionary associated with the passed
id
, orundefined
if there is none. RTCStatsReport.has()
-
Returns a boolean indicating whether the
RTCStatsReport
contains a statistics dictionary associated with the specifiedid
. RTCStatsReport.keys()
-
Returns a new Iterator object that contains the keys (IDs) for each element in the
RTCStatsReport
object, in insertion order. RTCStatsReport.values()
-
Returns a new Iterator object that contains the values (statistics object) for each element in the
RTCStatsReport
object, in insertion order. RTCStatsReport[Symbol.iterator]()
-
Returns a new Iterator object that contains a two-member array of
[id, statistic-dictionary]
for each element in theRTCStatsReport
object, in insertion order.
Description
A Promise
that resolves to an RTCStatsReport
is returned from the RTCRtpReceiver.getStats()
, RTCRtpSender.getStats()
and RTCPeerConnection.getStats()
methods.
Calling getStats()
on an RTCPeerConnection
lets you specify whether you wish to obtain outbound statistics, inbound statistics, or statistics for the whole connection.
The RTCRtpReceiver
and RTCRtpSender
versions of getStats()
only return inbound and outbound statistics, respectively.
The statistics report is a read-only Map
-like object: an ordered dictionary, where the properties are id
strings that uniquely identify the WebRTC object that was inspected to produce a particular set of statistics, and the value is a dictionary object containing those statistics.
A RTCStatsReport
can be iterated and used the same ways as a read-only Map
.
The report may contain many different categories of statistics, including inbound and outbound statistics for both the current and remote ends of the peer connection, information about codecs, certificates and media used, and so on.
Each category of statistic is provided in a different type of statistics dictionary object, which can be identified from its type
property.
Common instance properties
All the dictionary types have the following properties:
id
-
A string that uniquely identifies the object was monitored to produce the set of statistics. This value persists across reports for (at least) the lifetime of the connection. Note however that for some statistics the ID may vary between browsers and for subsequent connections, even to the same peer.
timestamp
-
A high resolution timestamp object (
DOMHighResTimeStamp
) object indicating the time at which the sample was taken. Many reported statistics are cumulative values; the timestamp allows rates and averages to be calculated between any two reports, at any desired reporting rate. type
-
A string with a value that indicates the type of statistics that the object contains, such as
candidate-pair
,inbound-rtp
,certificate
, and so on. The types of statistics and their corresponding objects are listed below.
Users typically iterate a RTCStatsReport
, using a forEach()
or for...of
loop, selecting the statistics of interest using the type
property.
Once a particular statistic object has been identified using its type
, the id
property can subsequently be used with get()
to obtain the same statistic report at a different time.
The timestamp can be used to calculate average values for statistics that accumulate over the lifetime of a connection.
The statistic types
The statistics type
values and their corresponding dictionaries are listed below.
type | Dictionary | Description |
---|---|---|
candidate-pair |
RTCIceCandidatePairStats |
Statistics describing the change from one RTCIceTransport to another, such as during an ICE restart. |
certificate |
RTCCertificateStats |
Statistics about a certificate being used by an RTCIceTransport . |
codec |
RTCCodecStats |
Statistics about a specific codec being used by streams being sent or received by this connection. |
data-channel |
RTCDataChannelStats |
Statistics related to one RTCDataChannel on the connection. |
inbound-rtp |
RTCInboundRtpStreamStats |
Statistics describing the state of one of the connection's inbound data streams. |
local-candidate |
RTCIceCandidateStats |
Statistics about a local ICE candidate associated with the connection's RTCIceTransport s. |
media-source |
RTCAudioSourceStats or RTCVideoSourceStats |
Statistics about the media produced by the MediaStreamTrack attached to an RTP sender. The dictionary this key maps to depends on the track's kind . |
outbound-rtp |
RTCOutboundRtpStreamStats |
Statistics describing the state of one of the outbound data streams on this connection. |
peer-connection |
RTCPeerConnectionStats |
Statistics describing the state of the RTCPeerConnection . |
remote-candidate |
RTCIceCandidateStats |
Statistics about a remote ICE candidate associated with the connection's RTCIceTransport s. |
remote-inbound-rtp |
RTCRemoteInboundRtpStreamStats |
Statistics describing the state of the inbound data stream from the perspective of the remote peer. |
remote-outbound-rtp |
RTCRemoteOutboundRtpStreamStats |
Statistics describing the state of the outbound data stream from the perspective of the remote peer. |
transport |
RTCTransportStats |
Statistics about a transport used by the connection. |
Examples
Iterate report from an RTCPeerConnection using forEach loop
This example logs shows how you might log video-related statistics for the local RTCRtpReceiver
responsible for receiving streamed media.
Given a variable myPeerConnection
, which is an instance of RTCPeerConnection
, the code uses await
to wait for the statistics report, and then iterates it using RTCStatsReport.forEach()
.
It then filters the dictionaries for just those reports that have the type
of inbound-rtp
and kind
of video
.
const stats = await myPeerConnection.getStats();
stats.forEach((report) => {
if (report.type === "inbound-rtp" && report.kind === "video") {
// Log the frame rate
console.log(report.framesPerSecond);
}
});
Iterate report from an RTCRtpSender using a for...of loop
This example shows how you might iterate the outbound statistics from an RTCRtpSender
.
The code follows a similar pattern to the previous example, but iterates using a for...of
-loop on the RTCStatsReport.values()
, and filters on the type
of outbound-rtp
.
It assumes you already have an RTCRtpSender
object named "sender".
const stats = await sender.getStats();
for (const stat of stats.values()) {
if (stat.type != "outbound-rtp") continue;
Object.keys(stat).forEach((statName) => {
console.log(`${statName}: ${report[statName]}`);
});
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
WebRTC: Real-Time Communication in Browsers # rtcstatsreport-object |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser